Here is an old (and long) post from the Grand Banks Owners forum in defence of wooden boats:
Mike, Normally, I don't like to respond to a posting in an argumentive manner, but, in this case, I simply can't resist.
I gather from your posting, that you have never owned a wooden boat and, therefore, can't speak to the issues from the point of view of personal experience. You can't possibly get an accurate comparison of wood versus fiberglass by talking to wood boat owners.
Here at Oak harbor Boat Works, we have worked on all types of boats, wood, fiberglass, steel and aluminum. I'll confine this rebuttal to wood versus fiberglass. Generally speaking, we have replaced more bad wood on fiberglass boats than we have on wood boats. Virtually all fiberglass boats have a good deal of wood in them and wood encapsulated in fiberglass is rot waiting to happen. Not if, but, when. Every fastener through the deck and cabin side is an entry for water to get into the wood that invariably reinforces and backs up the fiberglass for fastening into. Fiberglass boats are not a perfect, no maintenance type of boat. The wood used in their construction is usually inferior to the wood used in wood boats.
If you talk to a lot of wood boat owners, I'm sure you can find plenty of horror tales about all the work it takes to maintain a wood boat. However, I truly believe that what you are really hearing is that it takes a lot of effort to restore a wood boat that has not been properly maintained. It is true that it is a lot of effort to restore a wood boat......or a fiberglass boat, for that matter. It's kind of like restoring/remodeling a house. Building a new one is often easier and less expensive.
If you were to ask an owner of a wood boat that didn't have deferred maintenance and was truly in excellent condition, I don't believe you would hear the same answers to your questions. If you were to compare the maintenance requirements to properly maintain a wood boat versus a fiberglass boat that are basically identical and in excellent condition, I believe you would be surprised to discover that a wood boat actually requires less maintenance than a fiberglass boat. Grand Banks is a good example for comparison because they built basically the same boat in wood and in fiberglass.
For example, a fiberglass boat with a gelcoat finish and covered moorage will have to be polished and waxed at least once a year to maintain gloss and keep the gelcoat from oxidizing. Outside moorage and southern climates will require two or more sessions per year. A wood boat with painted surfaces and covered moorage will probably have to have a fresh coat of paint on the hull every 4 to 6 years, the house every 3 to 4 years and the flybridge every 2 to 3 years. We won't compare the varnished teak as it doesn't know if it's on a wood or a fiberglass boat, it's the same. Looking at a 36' Grand Banks, it would probably take a day to a day and a half to polish and wax (or poly) the hull from the cap rail down to the boot stripe. Over 5 years, that's 5 to 7.5 man days to maintain the hull. We won't discuss hull repairs from scrapes and gouges in docking, we'll call that a wash, even though the time to repair wood is less. The time to prep and apply a fresh coat of paint on the hull of a woodie is approximately two days or a little less, every, say, 5 years. In comparison, that's 5 to 7.5 man days to maintain a fiberglass hull versus 2 man days to maintain a wood hull over a five year period.
The comparison for the house is roughly 10 days over five years for fiberglass and 6 days for wood. For the flybridge, it's roughly 5 days every 5 years for fiberglass and 5 days for wood, a wash.
The decks are also easier to maintain on a wood GB. They are 7/8" thick and extend out over the hull planking versus a nominal 5/8" thick on a fiberglass boat and they also have gutters for water drainage which allows the water to attack the teak to fiberglass seal directly.
The teak trim and windows are about equal in maintenance requirements, although I believe the bedding lasts longer on the wood boats than the sealants on fiberglass boats.
You don't have to be concerned about hull blisters on a wood boat, but, it is definitely a concern with fiberglass, and expensive to repair, if necessary.
Damaged wood can be repaired back to original specifications. Fiberglass repairs are never as strong as the original construction.
Wood boats are warmer, drier, quieter and seem to have a lower center of gravity, hence, a better sea ride.
I honestly don't know of a single area where a fiberglass boat is superior to a wood boat. Most are designed to imitate a wood boat.
We recently had a wood 32' Grand Banks owner cut the red entrance bouy to the main channel coming into Oak Harbor Bay and hit a rock at low tide going at full cruising speed of roughly 7.5 to 8 knots. He hit the rock squarely just below the water line and the rock didn't move. He said the boat leaped into the air about 8 to 10 feet and came down to rest on the rock about halfway down the keel. They hit so hard that he was thrown into the helm wheel and injured his chest area and broke up the teak helm wheel. Fortunately, the tide was coming in and after the boat was refloated, they had virtually no water coming in and the damage was mostly cosmetic on the hull. Sure, there is a lot of crushed wood and some damage to the house and interior cabinets where shifting occurred, but, the boat came home on her own power, actually, she could have gone almost anywhere required without repairs. I'm quite sure that a fiberglass boat would have sunk, or at least, suffered a lot more hull damage.
I've gotten kind of wordy here, so I'll close with the fact that if I were to build a new personal boat today under 75', she would be wood. Nothing else comes close. The only reason we have so many fiberglass boats today is because it is an inexpensive way to construct boats with unskilled labor in a factory environment. Wood does require more skill to build, although, it would be interesting to see how wood boats could be built in a factory environment with computer aided machinery and new methods of finishing using unskilled labor.
In general, covered moorage will cut your maintenance requirements in half for wood or fiberglass.
Good luck, Bob Lowe
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